In the Matter of the Estate of Arlene Kae Severidt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 2025
Docket23-2087
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of the Estate of Arlene Kae Severidt (In the Matter of the Estate of Arlene Kae Severidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Estate of Arlene Kae Severidt, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-2087 Filed February 5, 2025

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ARLENE KAE SEVERIDT

BONITA HARLAND, AMANDA LOVIG, TRAVIS HARLAND, and ETHAN HARLAND, Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, James C. Ellefson,

Judge.

An heir and alleged devisees under a will appeal the district court’s

dismissal of their petition contesting the will. AFFIRMED.

Louis R. Hockenberg and Jeffrey P. Schultz of Sullivan & Ward, P.C., West

Des Moines, for appellants.

Michael Marquess of Marquess & Hoyer Law Office, P.C., Toledo, for

appellee.

Considered by Tabor, C.J., and Chicchelly and Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

Bonita Harland and her children, Amanda Lovig, Travis Harland, and Ethan

Harland, appeal the district court’s dismissal of their petition contesting the will of

Arlene Kae Severidt, Bonita’s sister. They argue (1) Bonita was entitled to but did

not receive adequate notice of probate, (2) Bonita’s children are devisees under

the current will and beneficiaries under the previous will, entitling them to notice of

probate, and (3) they satisfied Iowa’s notice pleading standards.

We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

On December 14, 2022, Severidt died testate in Marshall County, Iowa,

where she resided. She never married nor had children. Her parents predeceased

her. Her only surviving relatives are Bonita and Bonita’s children. Severidt’s will

named Bonita and Severidt’s friend, Robert Roseland, as the sole beneficiaries.

The two beneficiaries were appointed co-executors of the estate, and all estate

property was divided between them.

Notice of the will’s admission to probate was published on January 24 and

February 8 of 2023. Bonita and her children petitioned to contest the will on

June 21—over four months after the second publication notice. Roseland, as the

defendant to the petition, filed a pre-answer motion to dismiss on August 21. That

motion contended the statute of limitations expired before the petition was filed

and that Bonita’s children lacked standing to challenge the will. Following a

hearing the district court sustained Roseland’s motion to dismiss, finding, among

other things, the statute of limitations had expired.

Bonita and her children now appeal. 3

II. Standard of Review

“Actions to set aside or contest wills . . . shall be triable in probate as law

actions.” Iowa Code § 633.33 (2023). Review in cases other than equity are “for

correction of errors at law.” Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. A district court’s ruling on a

motion to dismiss is reviewed for the correction of errors at law, as are rulings on

statutory interpretations. See Struck v. Mercy Health Servs. Iowa Corp., 973

N.W.2d 533, 538 (Iowa 2022). “For purposes of reviewing a ruling on a motion to

dismiss, we accept as true the petition’s well-pleaded factual allegations, but not

its legal conclusions.” Id. (citation omitted). “[W]e will affirm a dismissal only if the

petition shows no right of recovery under any state of facts.” Id. (alteration in

original) (citation omitted).

III. Discussion

Bonita and her children argue (1) Bonita was entitled to but did not receive

adequate notice of probate, (2) Bonita’s children are devisees under the current

will and beneficiaries under the previous will, entitling them to notice of probate,

and (3) they satisfied Iowa’s notice pleading standards. We address each of these

arguments in turn.

Any interested party may petition to set aside the probate of a will. Iowa

Code § 633.308. To be an interested party, a person must have an immediate

interest rather than a contingent interest, which may never vest. In re Est. of

Pearson, 319 N.W.2d 248, 249–50 (Iowa 1982).

A. Bonita’s Right to Notice

Bonita contends she was “entitled to receive adequate notice of probate,

which she did not receive” due to “her status as an heir and devisee under the will.” 4

Iowa Code section 633.304(2) requires that the executor, “as soon as

practicable give notice, except to any executor, by ordinary mail to . . . each heir

of the decedent, and each devisee under the will admitted to probate . . . at such

persons’ last known addresses, of admission of the will to probate and of the

appointment of the executor.” (Empasis added.)

Iowa Code section 633.309(1), which establishes the limitations period for

claims to contest or set aside the probate of wills, states:

An action to contest or set aside the probate of a will must be commenced in the court in which the will was admitted to probate within the later to occur of four months from the date of second publication of notice of admission of the will to probate or one month following the mailing of the notice to all heirs of the Decedent and devisees under the will whose identities are reasonably ascertainable, at such persons’ last known addresses.

Bonita was an executor, a fact she does not dispute. Because she was an

executor and the statute expressly exempts executors from the notice requirement,

Bonita was not entitled to receive notice from Roseland (and herself) of the will’s

admission to probate.

Bonita’s argument that section 633.309(1) creates additional notice duties

expressly exempted in section 633.304(2) and would render useless the latter

section’s clause, “except to any executor.” “Under the ‘absurdity doctrine,’ a court

declines to follow the literal terms of the statute to avoid absurd results.” Brakke

v. Iowa Dep’t of Nat. Res., 897 N.W.2d 522, 534 (Iowa 2017). Here, Bonita sets

forth an unpersuasive argument in her attempt to nullify the executor exemption

under section 633.304(2). She does not quite spell it out, but this is essentially the

argument: Bonita as executor was deficient in failing to send notice to Bonita as 5

heir and devisee. Thus, the statute of limitations does not apply and she can bring

this action against her co-executor.

If we were to ignore section 633.304(2), any executor-heir could indefinitely

leave the door open to contesting a will by failing to provide notice to him or herself.

This would allow such an executor-heir to successfully circumvent the statute of

limitations at will.

Moreover, we are unconvinced by Bonita and her children’s argument that

the second publication notice was not in “substantial compliance” with the statutory

form outlined in section 633.304(3), due to the second publication date being left

blank on the February 23, 2023 filing of notice of probate of will. The district court

observed that “[t]he statutory form directs that the date of the second notice be

inserted by publisher. That direction would not apply to a mailed notice. The

second date of publication was readily ascertainable by consulting the court file.”

We decline to adopt Bonita’s interpretation of the probate code. She was

not entitled to notice of the will’s admission to probate, and the publication notice

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In the Matter of the Estate of Arlene Kae Severidt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-estate-of-arlene-kae-severidt-iowactapp-2025.